Category Archives: Freelance Cafe East

TAL Theme List

Here's the latest from the folks at This American Life. Pitch away!
-mia

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Dear This American Life friends and contributors,

We've got a new round of themes-in-progress and we're coming to you for story pitches, thoughts and suggestions for our upcoming shows.

How this process works: When you send in a story idea to me, I'll respond with a generic email letting you know that I received your pitch and that I've read it. I promise. I read every pitch. (I won't send you the auto response until I've read your pitch so expect a bit of a delay getting that email.) If we think the pitch is right for us, or if we need more information from you, I'll send you another email asking for more info on the story or letting you know we'd like to commission the story. But if you don't hear back from us within two weeks, beyond the initial auto-reply email, it means the story just isn't right for us or for the needs of that particular show. The idea of doing it this way is just to get through pitches and get back to everyone a little more quickly.

Like always, these themes are shows we're actively pursuing right now but we're always on the lookout for new stories or ideas. So if you've got a story that you think would work especially well for us but doesn't fit a specific theme listed below, please send it along anyway.

Thanks so much for your pitches. All of us here are very appreciative.

Best,
Julie
(julie@thislife.org)

FATHER’S DAY 2011: We’re a little under-the-gun getting this show together in time for Father’s Day (June 19th, in case you were wondering when to mail your card) so we’re mainly looking for stories that won’t take too long to produce. Interviews, essays, small documentaries would be great. But, basically, we’re looking for stories that, of course, feature dads but also comment in a larger way about what it means to be a dad – in good ways and bad. We’ve done a couple Father’s Day shows over the years and some successful stories have simply been about dads who tried to go above and beyond in their parenting efforts –sometimes they succeeded and sometimes they didn’t. We now have two really nice stories for this show but both stories are kind of bummers, in a way, so a story about a dad doing something nice, heroic, impressive, etc, would be really great for this show. Or maybe a story about a dad doing something unexpected – both to his kids and to himself. An overachieving dad? Or a dad who has/had an interesting philosophy about fatherhood? We’re also thinking about putting together two short segments for the show – one idea is a series of people (the “children”) talking about touching, emotional or affecting moments with their dads that they think their dads are unaware of; another segment could about various types of fatherly advice – the weirder, the sweeter, the misinformed, the better. If you remember any particular gems from either your own dad or friends’ dads, or moments with your own dads, will you let us know?

BREAKTHROUGH: This was originally a show about the search for a cure for cancer but we’ve decided to now make it a show about breakthroughs, discoveries and realizations of all kinds. One story we’re working on now is about the early days of natural gas exploration in Pennsylvania, and how those discoveries have affected research and development at national universities. We’re interesting in more stories about scientific breakthroughs with surprising consequences, but we’re also interested in stories of small, personal breakthrough moments. Maybe a story about a person conquering a fear or phobia – a fear of flying or of heights or something more unusual. Maybe a story about resolving a problem or dispute – two opposing sides coming to a truce. Another type of story could be a breakthrough that solved a crime, like a break in a case or something similar. Stories of smaller or more personal breakthrough moments would work best if there were surprising consequences.

A HOUSE DIVIDED: Stories where some kind of group who is usually very functional and civil (think family, or corporation or, in one example, the state of Wisconsin), finds itself in a circumstance where everyone takes sides. And where taking sides can even threaten to shove a portion of that group out. The idea of the theme is very Last Straw or Boiling Point. For example, we have one story about the recent recall petitions filed against 9 Wisconsin senators (6 Republicans, 3 Democrats), in a move that is so atypical of Wisconsin’s easygoing politics, that it leaves us wondering what the hot tempers are really all about. We have a couple of big institution stories in the plans for this show, so a story about an actual family feud or something more personal would be really nice.

REALITY SHOWS: We’re aware that talking about reality shows is a little late-90s but we’re now coming across so many stories where the engine of the story – the goals or the stakes – is simply the desire to either make or be cast on a reality show. The “reality show” as a plot device in stories is now taking the place of wanting to strike it rich or wanting to find love or wanting eternal life. It’s just understood that, of course, you’d do crazy, nefarious stuff and possibly go to extreme lengths because, in the end, you might get a reality show out of it. And, we’ve found, these types of stories can be really fun. We’re currently working on one story about a wannabe reality show private detective agency that actually gets involved in very real, very scary and very criminal work. We’re looking for more stories about the making of reality shows that take an unexpected turn or have surprising consequences for the contestants. We’d also love great reality show ideas. The difficulty of doing stories about reality shows, though, is that we’re often left wondering “what does this even mean?” So if you have a story or a thought about how reality shows can mean something larger, that’d be great.

THE SUBURBS: One of our producers was recently in a car with a friend of hers, driving down the wide streets and past the big box stores of a Chicago suburb when, both at the same time, our producer said “God, I could never live here” and her friend said “God, this would be so easy.” It’s that tension between a more livable life and the idea of the soul-crushing homogeneity of the suburbs that can be so interesting. Sometimes the darkest stories take place in the suburbs and often suburban life can run counter to what you’d expect. We’re looking for stories about things that can either only take place in a suburb or, conversely, shockingly took place in a suburb. One story we’re pursuing now is about a 21 Jump Street-type of undercover police sting at a suburban high school in Florida that set the town on fire. We may focus the show entirely on crime in the suburbs so if you have suburban crime stories, that’d be great. But we may also keep the more general theme, in which case historical stories about suburbs and how they came to be would be good but also stories about truly suburban events or politics or relationships could work, too.

AMUSEMENT PARK: We’ve done a few shows in the past where all of the stories are located in one place – for instance, a Rest Stop show set at a New York Thru-way rest stop, a show several years ago set at a 24 hour diner in Chicago – and we’re hoping to do another show like that this summer set at an amusement park. We’re still in the very early stages of planning this out and figuring out logistics and permissions but if you have thoughts or suggestions for this show, we’d really appreciate it. We might also set part of the show gathering day-in-the-life type of documentary stories at the park but also have part of the show with essays or short fiction about working at amusement parks or an event that happened at an amusement park and things like that. So if you have any interesting, emotional or funny stories about amusement parks, let us know.

SUMMER FLING: It’s possible this show and the Amusement Park show will join together but our hope for now is that the shows could be separate. We don’t have any particular stories yet for this show but we have a wish list of stories for this show. A classic “summer fling” story would be great – maybe something just really romantic or funny or time or place-specific? An unlikely summer fling? But we also don’t have to limit the show only to relationship/romance stories. We could also have any stories that are summer-specific – a business that only lasts one summer? Or someone who adopts a new identity for one summer? A friendship that lasts for the summer?

OUT OF MY DEPTH: Basically, stories about people getting in over their heads. We have one story about a man who comes up with a truly inventive and diabolical plan to pay off a debt, only to have the whole thing spectacularly backfire on him. We’d like more stories about simple plans or overconfidence or even just fingers-crossed-hope-it-works type of situations that quickly become too complicated or difficult. Because we have a few personal stories already in mind for this show, a story about a larger institution or business or enterprise could work well for this show.

GOSSIP: We'd like to do a show about the strange and surprising ways that gossip works. We've got one possible story about American researchers in Malawi, who track the way local communities think about AIDS. For more than a decade, they've been giving notebooks to certain women in Malawi, who are tasked with writing down whatever gossip they hear about AIDS in their villages – who's got it, how they got it, why they got it, whether they're getting treated, etc. In this way, they've figured out how people's ideas, and misconceptions, about the disease have changed – and how to better fight it. We'd love to have more pitches about the good side of gossip, the utility of gossip. Or perhaps well-meaning gossip that went very wrong. Or stories about how gossip spreads in unexpected ways — maybe you told the guy sitting next to you in an airplane a top-secret story, and then heard it repeated back to you at a party three years later. That kind of thing. Stories about how gossip has changed history would be great, too. We'd probably like to avoid stories of straight-up mean gossip that had awful consequences – just because we're all familiar with those stories. That said, if there's a really great one, we'd certainly consider it.

WAIT – YOU’RE THE CAVALRY?: This is a show about imperfect heroes. Much of the show we’re planning is about an FBI whistleblower who is now single-handedly reviewing thousands of criminal convictions at the heart of the famous scandal in the FBI’s crime lab ten years ago. But while the whistleblower may have been a great whistleblower – he’s obsessive, honest, and repulsed by deceit – he may not be the best person for the job of cleaning up the mess. We’re now looking for more stories about possibly flawed saviors. Maybe a story about a person or a group that is called to fix the problem they themselves created?

2011 Call for Entries – Knight-Batten Awards (deadline extended)

FYI folks: the deadline for this j-lab award has been extended to Friday, June 10. For more info and to apply, visit:

http://www.j-lab.org/projects/knight-batten-awards-for-innovations-in-journalism/
-Mia

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The Knight-Batten Awards for Innovations in Journalism reward news and information ideas that significantly enhance opportunities for digital engagement. The awards honor novel efforts that actively involve people in public issues, supply entry points that invite their participation, sit their imagination, and meet their information needs in creative ways.

Honored are pioneering approaches to news and information that:
    * Spark widespread audience engagement.
    * Encourage new forms of information sharing.
    * Spur non-traditional interactions that have an impact on a
          community.
    * Foster animated two-way conversations between audiences and
          news providers.
    * Create new ways of imparting useful information.
    * Employ new definitions of news.

Entries could consist of such things as networked journalism projects, new social networking ideas, innovative citizen media initiatives, news games, creative use of mobile devices, data mining ideas, new online applications, augmented reality experiences, other advances in interactive and participatory journalism or out-of-the-box thinking.

Entries may also employ simple efforts that notably connect in new ways with a community.

Entries from all news producers are eligible. Encouraged are both top-down and bottom-up innovations, those driven by news creators and those driven by news consumers.

The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation has funded a $16,000 awards program to honor the creative use of new technologies to engage people in important public issues and to showcase compelling models for the future of news.

Among the prizes to be awarded are:
    * A $10,000 Grand Prize.
    * $6,000 in Special Distinction Awards to be awarded at the judges’ discretion.

Winners will be announced in the summer of 2011 and are expected to participate in a panel on September 7, 2011 at the Knight-Batten Awards Symposium and invited to help educate the profession about journalism innovations.

http://www.j-lab.org/projects/knight-batten-awards-for-innovations-in-journalism/

Call for Summer Interns with State of the Reunion

Want to get a foot in the door with an NPR multimedia program? Here's your chance. No pay, but the hours are reasonable, you can work from anywhere, and the experience is invaluable. Pass it along.
-mia

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State of the Re:Union (SOTRU) is a dynamic NPR show that combines hour-long radio episodes with documentary shorts, video podcasts, images, music and written articles to reach audiences in new and exciting ways. With each episode SOTRU travels to a different American city or town to explore what makes a community, to discover the people who bring it together and understand the issues they face. We air on more than 200 stations across the US.

SOTRU currently has several openings for interns for our June 6 – September 15 summer production season. Interns will mainly be responsible for transcribing audio interviews, as well as special projects, including story research, pre-interviewing, and multimedia production.

As a SOTRU intern, you will also have the unique opportunity to listen in on editorial calls with our host, editor and radio producers as we shape each episode.

To be considered for this internship, you should have a strong creative background, solid writing skills and be able to take direction and work independently. Audio and video editing skills are very welcome. Our staff works remotely, and you can too; people anywhere in the US can apply. This internship is unpaid, and we generally ask for about 10 hours a week, sometimes more during busy weeks.

If interested, please submit your resume to:

Brenton Crozier, Multimedia Producer
brenton@stateofthereunion.com

Thank you for your interest in State of the Re:Union!

Brooklyn Lit Mag Seeks Audio / Multimedia Submissions

Very cool online journal seeks your multimedia submissions. Details below.
-mia

++++++++++++++++++++++++

Storyscape, an online literary and arts journal that is “story centered,” is actively pursuing audio, art, mixed media, and multi-media works that explore the concept of “story” from a non-textual perspective. The mission of Storyscape Journal is to collect stories in all their forms and formats. We get particularly excited when we publish stories that have no… you know… words. Or, at least, no words you can SEE.

We’re looking for audio, and this is where you come in.

Submit your audio, video, multimedia, and thing-we-can’t-describe-
because-we’ve-never-seen-it-before (gasp) by link or by .mp3 or by whatchamacallit HERE:

storymaster@storyscapejournal.com

To check out the site: www.storyscapejournal.com

Our mission statement: http://www.storyscapejournal.com/home/mission.php
Our submission guidelines: http://www.storyscapejournal.com/home/submit.php

Past contributors include: Amber Boardman, Ken Cormier, David Shapiro, Stephanie Chambers, Tereza Swanda, Ryan Scammell, and many more.

WYPR in Baltimore hiring education reporter

This is a full time gig, but I thought some of you might be interested. Pass it along!
-mia

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EDUCATION REPORTER

Baltimore’s NPR News station WYPR seeks a full-time Education reporter with 5 years reporting experience, previous radio experience a plus.  Applicants must have knowledge of digital editing.  Salary is depending on experience.

Submit cover letter (cite recruitment source) and resume to: Business Manager at the address posted below or: jobs@wypr.org.  NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.  WYPR is an EOE.

WYPR-FM
2216 North Charles Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21218

 

call for audio postcards from the Great Lakes Region

Self-explanatory. Send along to your contacts in the Great Lakes region.
-Mia

++++++++++++++++++++++++

CALL FOR AUDIO POSTCARDS FROM GREAT LAKES REGION. Pay: 300 Dollars plus expenses, 50 dollars for images. 2-3 minutes. 


Front and Center is a new project based at WBEZ, but working with stations across the Great Lakes Region.  The project will be making long-form pieces that are creative and engaging. Every six-months we will put out a call for pitches.  You can expect a longer letter from us in the future explaining the upcoming themes and how to pitch.

But right now, we have a more pressing request: Leading up to the launch we are releasing short audio post cards from around the region. We’d love to hear from freelancers who might want to make one. The postcards should come from the Great Lakes region and have something to do with water. For example:

-These guys who ride their metal boats in the rivers and stir up Asian Carp to jump the air, then shoot them with cross bows.  

-Divers who go look at shipwrecks in the Great Lakes.  

-Is there a local cuisine involving Great Lakes fish? A unique sport or hobby  that happens on the beach? Music inspired by the lakes? People who work in the lakes? A family tradition connected to the lakes? A brewery that gets its water from the Great Lakes? A local myth, tall tale, or ghost story that features the lake?

The postcards should be 2-3 min long. We pay 300 dollars per postcard. Expenses can likely be covered, but must be pre-approved. We can throw in an extra 50 bucks for digital images.


Production can happen through June, but we are on a tight deadline to schedule the post cards and would love to hear from folks ASAP. We also have a few postcards we could possibly assign, so if you don’t have an idea, but live in the region, drop me a line and we can see if there is a fit.

Shannon Heffernan, Front And Center
sheffernan@wbez.org

CALL FOR ENTRIES – duPont-Columbia Awards

Hey journos. Details below for submitting your work for the prestigious duPont award. Some indie colleagues and I won this last year for Trey Kay's independent radio documentary The Great Textbook War and I have to say, it was a great thrill. Go for it!

-mia

++++++++++++++++++++++

Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards
Honoring the Best in Broadcast & Digital News Programming

DEADLINE – JULY 1, 2011

Eligibility Period: July 1, 2010-June 30, 2011
www.dupontawards.org


WE INVITE YOU to submit entries in the following categories:

  • Independent Productions – Documentaries
  • Local & National Radio
  • Digital Productions

    WHAT MAKES A DUPONT WINNER? The duPont Jury honors outstanding journalism. We look for excellence in reporting and evidence of commitment to important stories. We especially encourage the submission of daily news stories and breaking news coverage as well as feature stories, a series of related reports or selections from a correspondent's beat reporting in a given year.

    ELIGIBILITY Programs must have appeared on air, on line or in theaters for the first time between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011.

    ENTRY DEADLINES Long-form entries running longer than 2 hours must be
    submitted by June 15. All other entries must be submitted by July 1.

    ENTRIES WILL BE JUDGED by a Board of Screeners, many of whom are past duPont Award winners. The best entries are then referred to the duPont Jury. Finalists will be selected in November and the winners will be announced in December 2011.

    ENTER ONLINE The entry form for the duPont-Columbia Awards is now available online at www.dupontawards.org

    We encourage digital submissions of media. Please see the Web site for more details.

    QUESTIONS? Call us at 212-854-5047, e-mail us at dupontawards@jrn.columbia.edu, or visit our Web site www.dupontawards.org for answers to frequently asked questions.

    Abi Wright
    Director, Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards
    John Chancellor Award
    Graduate School of Journalism
    Columbia University
    212-854-5047
    www.dupontawards.org

  • Metcalf workshop deadline extended to June 3

    New deadline for environmental reporting fellowship – details below.
    -mia

    +++++++++++++++++++++

    METCALF INSTITUTE EXTENDS DEADLINE FOR MARINE SCIENCE SEMINAR FOR JOURNALISTS

     

    Seminar to focus on environmental issues facing coastal communities
     
    Application postmark deadline extended to June 3

     

    NARRAGANSETT, RI – May 17, 2011 –The Metcalf Institute for Marine & Environmental Reporting is offering a seminar for journalists, Coastal Impacts: a Marine Science Seminar for Journalists, July 13-15, 2011, at the University of Rhode Island Graduate School of Oceanography in Narragansett, Rhode Island.

     

    The three-day science seminar will provide an introduction to environmental issues affecting coastal communities, including marine pollution, water quality, and links between oceans and human health. The Metcalf program will feature leading marine and environmental scientists and journalists, coastal field trips, and visits to marine research labs.

     

    Journalists from all media who want to improve their skills in environmental reporting and gain a thorough understanding of how scientific research is conducted are invited to apply for the science seminar. Journalists who report for ethnic news outlets, including freelancers, and minority journalists are strongly encouraged to apply. Applicants should have a minimum of two years’ experience and a demonstrated interest in covering environmental topics.

     

    The seminar is funded by the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation, the National Science Foundation, and the Chicago Tribune Foundation and will be held at the URI Graduate School of Oceanography, a leading oceanographic research campus.

     

    The tuition-free seminar includes lodging, meals, and travel support up to $200. Newsrooms are asked to cover salaries while participants are "on assignment" during the program. Detailed instructions are noted on the application form.

     

    Applications may be downloaded at www.metcalfinstitute.org The application deadline has been extended, and should be postmarked by June 3, 2011.  For additional information, email fellowships@metcalfinstitute.org or call 401-874-6500.

     

    The mission of the Metcalf Institute for Marine and Environmental Reporting is to promote clear and accurate reporting of scientific news and environmental issues; to strengthen understanding and working relationships between members of the scientific community and members of the news media; and to provide opportunities for beginning journalists to learn, on both a formal and an informal level, how to improve their skills in marine and environmental reporting.

     

    The Metcalf Institute for Marine and Environmental Reporting, based at the University of Rhode Island’s Graduate School of Oceanography, was established in 1997 with funding from three media foundations, the Belo Corporation, the Providence Journal Charitable Foundation and the Philip L. Graham Fund, and from the Telaka Foundation. It is named for the late Michael P. Metcalf, a visionary in journalism and publisher of The Providence Journal Bulletin from 1979-1987. In addition to providing science training for reporters and editors, Metcalf Institute administers The Grantham Prize for Excellence in Reporting on the Environment. For more information, contact Metcalf Institute at 401-874-6211 or visit us online at www.metcalfinstitute.org.

    Sunshine Menezes, Ph.D.

    Executive Director
    Metcalf Institute for Marine and Environmental Reporting
    Graduate School of Oceanography
    University of Rhode Island

    Narragansett Bay Campus

    Narragansett, RI  02882

    Office:  401.874.6499

    Fax:      401.874.6486

    Support Metcalf Institute with a tax-deductible contribution. 

    Third Coast Festival Announces Call for Entries

    The Academy Awards of radio storytelling are accepting entries – details follow. Good luck!
    -mia

    +++++++++++++++++++

    Entries are now being accepted for the Third Coast International Audio Festival’s 11th annual Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Competition!

    The TCIAF invites producers around the globe to submit their finest radio/audio stories in the following categories: Best Documentary (gold, silver, bronze, honorable mention, directors’ choice), Best New Artist, Radio Impact and Best News Feature.

    The TCIAF accepts stories that document people, places, times, events, phenomena and issues. These include but are not limited to: investigative reports, narrative stories, personal essays, profiles and audio portraits. Podcasts and documentaries that redefine the documentary form are welcome.

    Winners receive cash awards – $5,000 for the gold prize – to support their future creative endeavors. They also receive national recognition in Best of the Best: The 2011 Third Coast Festival Broadcast, airing on public radio stations across the country this fall.

    The early deadline for entries is June 23rd at noon PDT. The late deadline is July 14th at noon PDT. Entry fees range from $30 (students) to $50 (by early deadline) to $70 (by late deadline.) Read more about guidelines, prizes and how to upload entries at: http://www.thirdcoastfestival.org/competitions/tc-rhdf-competition/info

    Competition winners will be announced publicly on October 22, 2011 in Chicago at the Third Coast Awards Ceremony.

    As of 2011, the TC/RHDF Competition will have honored nearly 100 extraordinary stories from seven countries/four continents and given $250,000 in cash prizes to many of the most innovative producers of the past decade.

    The 2011 TC / RHDF Competition is powered by the Public Radio Exchange (PRX).

    Friend us ( http://www.facebook.com/pages/Third-Coast-International-Audio-Festival/51072992130?ref=ts )/follow us ( http://twitter.com )to receive the latest TCIAF Competition updates. Send questions to info@thirdcoastfestival.org or call 312-948-4652.

    Johanna Zorn
    Executive Director
    Third Coast International Audio Festival
    Navy Pier
    848 East Grand Ave. Suite 400
    Chicago IL 60611
    312-948-4652
    jzorn@thirdcoastfestival.org

    Keep the audio stories coming… Support
    the Third Coast Festival, and thanks.
    http://www.thirdcoastfestival.org/about-tciaf/supporters/help-us-soar